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Behind the Shields of Fantasy: The Populist Aesthetics of Status Loss
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Adam SitzeJohannes VölzLudger Hagedorn
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Decolonial Desires: Thinking through Discipline and Difference
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Clemena AntonovaSaurabh DubeJulian Strube
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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‘Patriotic Science’: The COVID 19 Pandemic and the Politics of Indigeneity and Decoloniality in Sri Lanka
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Harshana RambukwellaLudger HagedornSaurabh Dube
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Typology and Principles of Regional Integration in Comparative Perspective
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Clemena AntonovaMario Apostolov
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
The end of the ideological Cold War divisions created a cheery sentiment of renewed unity in Europe and the world, with chances for development for all. As the stability of the bipolar structure vanished, strengthening regional integration entities seemed to become the bricks for the new organizational edifice of world society.
At first, this vision was substantiated by countries coming together in various regional groupings, led by pragmatic interest, overcoming age-old perceptions of neighbours typically fighting each other. Several types of regions formed: a top-down integration as in the European Union and its institutions; a bottom-up expansion of regional supply chains as in East Asia; the more limited approach of free trade agreements as in USMCA; or simply regions without regionalism. This talk will look for common principles underpinning the various efforts at regional integration, such as the joint pursuit of peace and economic development, assistance to laggards, etc., building on existing theories (Neofunctionalism, New Regionalism and Comparative Regionalism), trying to go beyond.
Read more
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
The end of the ideological Cold War divisions created a cheery sentiment of renewed unity in Europe and the world, with chances for development for all. As the stability of the bipolar structure vanished, strengthening regional integration entities seemed to become the bricks for the new organizational edifice of world society.
At first, this vision was substantiated by countries coming together in various regional groupings, led by pragmatic interest, overcoming age-old perceptions of neighbours typically fighting each other. Several types of regions formed: a top-down integration as in the European Union and its institutions; a bottom-up expansion of regional supply chains as in East Asia; the more limited approach of free trade agreements as in USMCA; or simply regions without regionalism. This talk will look for common principles underpinning the various efforts at regional integration, such as the joint pursuit of peace and economic development, assistance to laggards, etc., building on existing theories (Neofunctionalism, New Regionalism and Comparative Regionalism), trying to go beyond.
Read more
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Tempering Power
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Adam SitzeLudger HagedornMartin Krygier
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Ideological Fluidity of Collective National Rights
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Adam SitzeOskar Mulej
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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The Limits of Migration Control
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Lecture
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Dariusz StolaIvan VejvodaRanabir Samaddar
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Series: Lecture
Thanks to a historically unprecedented system of police control, transnational mobility from European communist states is probably the best documented social phenomenon of its kind and a unique experiment in the limits of the state control of mobility. This lecture presented some of the conclusions of Stola’s research project on migrations from communist Poland. These migrations underwent a marked evolution, from the movement of millions of people in the 1940s; to almost nil under the non-exit policy of the early 1950s; to the reemergence and gradual expansion of transnational mobility, especially within the Soviet bloc, between 1956 and 1980; to mass population flows in the late 1980s. Each trip outside the bloc, and indeed each trip abroad for most of the duration of communist rule, required applying for a permit from the Security Service. This procedure resulted in an archival collection of passport files that fills some 60 kilometers of shelf space. Despite the constraints, more than two million people eventually left Poland for good, and temporary movements occurred on a mass scale, pioneering forms of mobility that continued well after 1989. This lecture shed light on the key factors and currents of migration in communist Poland, as well as the evolution of the migration regime, from early imitation of the Soviet model to its eventual implosion.
Read more
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Series: Lecture
Thanks to a historically unprecedented system of police control, transnational mobility from European communist states is probably the best documented social phenomenon of its kind and a unique experiment in the limits of the state control of mobility. This lecture presented some of the conclusions of Stola’s research project on migrations from communist Poland. These migrations underwent a marked evolution, from the movement of millions of people in the 1940s; to almost nil under the non-exit policy of the early 1950s; to the reemergence and gradual expansion of transnational mobility, especially within the Soviet bloc, between 1956 and 1980; to mass population flows in the late 1980s. Each trip outside the bloc, and indeed each trip abroad for most of the duration of communist rule, required applying for a permit from the Security Service. This procedure resulted in an archival collection of passport files that fills some 60 kilometers of shelf space. Despite the constraints, more than two million people eventually left Poland for good, and temporary movements occurred on a mass scale, pioneering forms of mobility that continued well after 1989. This lecture shed light on the key factors and currents of migration in communist Poland, as well as the evolution of the migration regime, from early imitation of the Soviet model to its eventual implosion.
Read more
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The ‘Authoritarian International’
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Ludger HagedornMartin KrygierRicardo Pagliuso Regatieri
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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The Future of Work: Is Artificial Intelligence a New Road to Serfdom?
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Lecture
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Robert Skidelsky
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Series: Lecture
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Series: Lecture
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The Declaration of Universal Human Rights at Seventy-Five
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Adam SitzeLudger HagedornMartin Krygier
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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